Place de la Concorde

Item

Title
Place de la Concorde
Alternative Title
Place Louis XV
Place de la Révolution
Creator
Ange-Jacques Gabriel (French architect, 1698-1782)
Jacques-Ignace Hittorff (French architect, 1792-1867)
City
Paris, Île-de-France, France
Address
8th arrondissement
Rue de Rivoli and Champs-Elysees
GPS
51.186667
Location
France
Building Creation Date
1755-ca. 1775 (creation)
1829-1854 (alteration)
Century
18th century
Description
bird's-eye perspective, exterior perspectives
The commission for the Place Louis XV was awarded to the Premier Architecte, Anges-Jacques Gabriel. A preliminary design was approved in 1755
the definitive plan in 1757. Construction of the Place Louis XV continued until the 1770s. Under the direction of Nicolas-Marie Potain, Gabriel's scheme transformed the muddy Esplanade into a knuckle that reinforced the great east"“west axis of the Louvre and the Champs-Elysees, subsequently extended to Neuilly, and linked it with the peripheral boulevards, the Cours de la Reine and, via a bridge built by Perronet in 1786, the Left Bank . The Place Louis XV acted as a catalyst for residential development along the north side of the Champs-Elysees. The Comte de Rambuteau levelled and widened the line of boulevards from the Bastille to the re-named Place de la Concorde (ca. 1840), also redesigned by Hittorff (1829-1854).
Techniques
line drawings (drawings)
Classification
Architectural Documentation
Documentation Type
illustrations
Style/Period
Nineteenth century
Cultural Context
French
Subject
architecture
cityscape
City planning
Street lighting
Source
Blomfield Reginald Theodore, Sir. A History of French Architecture from the Death of Mazarin till the Death of Louis XV. 1. London: G. Bell and sons, ltd., 1921, CLXXI.
Access Rights
Public Domain
creator
Gabriel, Ange-Jacques
Hittorff, Jacques-Ignace

Ange-Jacques Gabriel (French architect, 1698-1782) and Jacques-Ignace Hittorff (French architect, 1792-1867), “Place de la Concorde”, Arch Design Images, accessed November 15, 2024, https://exhibits.lib.ttu.edu/s/archlib/item/18392